It looked like a simple situation at first. A man quietly took a $100 bill from the store’s register when no one was paying attention. No alarms, no confrontation—just a quick, unnoticed move. Minutes later, he walked right back into the same store, acting like a regular customer. He picked out $70 worth of items, approached the counter, and casually handed over the same $100 bill he had just stolen. Everything seemed normal on the surface.
The cashier, unaware of what had just happened, accepted the bill without hesitation. She rang up the purchase, gave him $30 in change, and sent him on his way with a polite smile. To her, it was just another transaction in a busy day. But hidden beneath that routine exchange was a mistake that would cost the store more than anyone realized in that moment.
At first, people tend to think the loss is just the $100 that was stolen. But when you look closer, the situation becomes more interesting. The man essentially used stolen money to “pay,” meaning the store never actually received real value for the goods sold. On top of that, they handed him $30 in real cash as change, thinking the transaction was legitimate. That’s where the true loss begins to take shape.
So what did the store actually lose? The $70 worth of goods is gone—taken without real payment. The $30 in change is also gone—real money handed over. The original $100 bill? It never counted as legitimate payment because it was already stolen from the store itself. When you break it all down, the store’s total loss isn’t $100—it’s actually $100 in combined value: $70 in goods and $30 in cash.
What makes this scenario so tricky is how easily it confuses people at first glance. It feels like there should be more loss involved, but once you follow the money step by step, the answer becomes clear. Sometimes, the biggest mistakes aren’t about what’s taken—but how it’s taken, right in plain sight.